Difference between revisions of "NSLU2"
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m (→Tweaks) |
m (→Devel) |
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** playing at 8000 Hz mono is poor (recorded on host) |
** playing at 8000 Hz mono is poor (recorded on host) |
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** madplay -b8 -R8000 ...mp3 is correct |
** madplay -b8 -R8000 ...mp3 is correct |
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+ | ==Misc== |
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+ | ===Boot diagnostics=== |
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+ | From /usr/share/doc/nslu2-utils/README.Debian but in case of problems I prefer to have the text here :-) |
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+ | Some of the led states during boot include: |
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+ | - Cycling down all the leds from top to bottom: The APEX boot loader. |
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+ | - Amber status led: Initramfs is running, mounting root filesystem. |
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+ | - Disk 1 on, status slowly switching between amber and green: Root |
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+ | filesystem mounted, system booting. |
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+ | - Disk 1 on, status green, with fast double amber flashes: System is booted |
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+ | and running. The frequency of the amber flashes indicates the system's |
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+ | one minute load average; faster flashes denote higher load. |
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+ | - Disk 1 on, status quickly flashing between black/green and black/amber. |
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+ | Single user mode. Again the flash interval denotes load. |
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+ | - Disk 1 on, status slowly switching beteween amber and red: Shutdown in |
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+ | progress. |
Revision as of 23:53, 17 April 2007
http://www.andreabeggi.net/wp-content/53006-nslu2.jpg
Intro
- XScale processor from Intel (ARM) at 266MHz (133MHz before hacking...)
- 32Mb SDRAM
- 8Mb Flash
- 2 USB 2.0 ports
Links
- Description on wikipedia
- OpenSlug
Todo
- Mine came with
- Server Name: LKG63472F
- Version: V2.3RA5
- Connect USB printer?
- Install backuppc
- Connect Tuxdroid dongle
Debian
Installation
To install, follow the howto, here are the big steps:
- Get Debian 4.0r0 firmware from http://www.slug-firmware.net/ and unzip it
- Power the NSLU2 and wait a bit (green light) before plugging it to the network if you've a DHCP, so the NSLU2 will choose itself IP 192.168.1.77, otherwise look to your DHCP server logs to find the IP attribution
- Go to the admin webpage, tab administration, login admin/admin
- Configure ALL network params if you don't have DHCP
- Go to the admin webpage, tab administration, login admin/admin, tab advanced, tab upgrade
- Upload di-nslu2.bin, start upgrade
- Wait for "upgrading ok" (5mins) -> wait for 3 bips (5-10mins)
- This is the last moment to plug an external USB mass-storage if you didn't do so yet
- Login via ssh installer@192.168.1.77 (or another IP got by DHCP...) pwd "install"
- I did it from an xterm but exported term mode is pure console so it's better to login from a real text console otherwise the ncurses menu is a bit broken (but still usable)
- Start installation, manually load the following modules:
- ext3-modules-2.6.18-4-ixp4xx-di
- partman-auto
- partman-ext3
- scsi-core-modules-2.6.18-4-ixp4xx-di
- usb-storage-modules-2.6.18-4-ixp4xx-di
- Whatever system you choose to partition your disk, be sure to have at least 128M of swap, I've set up 512M on my 400G drive.
- In total it took about 100 mins to complete
- If you need a console, start a second ssh connection and choose to obtain a shell
- On tasksel, I chose absolutely nothing, I prefer to take only what I need later
After first reboot
- dpkg --get-selections|wc -l
142
- du -hs /
179M
- dmesg:
Linux version 2.6.18-4-ixp4xx (Debian 2.6.18.dfsg.1-12) (waldi@debian.org) (gcc versi on 4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)) #1 Tue Mar 27 18:01:56 BST 2007 CPU: XScale-IXP42x Family [690541f1] revision 1 (ARMv5TE), cr=0000397f Machine: Linksys NSLU2 Memory policy: ECC disabled, Data cache writeback On node 0 totalpages: 8192 DMA zone: 8192 pages, LIFO batch:1 CPU0: D VIVT undefined 5 cache CPU0: I cache: 32768 bytes, associativity 32, 32 byte lines, 32 sets CPU0: D cache: 32768 bytes, associativity 32, 32 byte lines, 32 sets Built 1 zonelists. Total pages: 8192 Kernel command line: console=ttyS0,115200 rtc-x1205.probe=0,0x6f noirqdebug IRQ lockup detection disabled PID hash table entries: 256 (order: 8, 1024 bytes) Console: colour dummy device 80x30 Dentry cache hash table entries: 4096 (order: 2, 16384 bytes) Inode-cache hash table entries: 2048 (order: 1, 8192 bytes) Memory: 32MB = 32MB total Memory: 25780KB available (1948K code, 496K data, 92K init)
Calibrating delay loop... 132.71 BogoMIPS (lpj=663552) ...
- hdparm -tT /dev/sda
/dev/sda: Timing cached reads: 86 MB in 2.04 seconds = 42.20 MB/sec Timing buffered disk reads: 28 MB in 3.12 seconds = 8.98 MB/sec
Tweaks
- By default the power button restarts the slug, change the call to shutdown in /etc/inittab:
ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -h now
- Ok so our NSLU2 is well underclocked, let's restore its full speed following this howto
Calibrating delay loop... 266.24 BogoMIPS (lpj=1331200)
Much better :-)
/dev/sda: Timing cached reads: 90 MB in 2.00 seconds = 44.98 MB/sec Timing buffered disk reads: 32 MB in 3.03 seconds = 10.56 MB/sec
A bit better but nothing fantastic...
- Setup static network parameters
- apt-get install resolvconf
- edit /etc/network/interfaces
allow-hotplug eth0 iface eth0 inet static address 192.168.1.77 netmask 255.255.255.0 gateway 192.168.1.1 dns-nameservers 192.168.1.2 192.168.1.1
Devel
Be prepared to do some native compilation...
- apt-get install build-essential
Tuxdroid
Basics
- apt-get install subversion libusb-dev libglib2.0-dev ipython
- mkdir /home/tuxdroid; cd /home/tuxdroid
- svn co http://svn.tuxisalive.com tuxdroid-svn
- cd tuxdroid-svn/daemon/trunk
- make
- mkdir -p /opt/tuxdroid/api
- ln -s /home/tuxdroid/tuxdroid-svn/software /opt/tuxdroid/api/python
- mkdir -p /opt/tuxdroid/bin
- ln -s /home/tuxdroid/tuxdroid-svn/daemon/trunk/tuxdaemon /opt/tuxdroid/bin
- ln -s /opt/tuxdroid/bin/tuxdaemon /usr/local/bin/tuxdaemon
- echo -e "#/bin/bash\npython -i /opt/tuxdroid/api/python/tux.py" > /opt/tuxdroid/bin/tuxsh
- chmod 755 /opt/tuxdroid/bin/tuxsh
- ln -s /opt/tuxdroid/bin/tuxsh /usr/local/bin/tuxsh
Flashing tools
- cd tuxdroid-svn/firmware/tuxup/trunk/
- make
- ln -s /home/tuxdroid/tuxdroid-svn/firmware/tuxup/trunk/tuxup /opt/tuxdroid/bin
- ln -s /opt/tuxdroid/bin/tuxup /usr/local/bin/tuxup
- wget http://belnet.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/dfu-programmer/dfu-programmer-0.4.0.tar.gz
- tar xzf dfu-programmer-0.4.0.tar.gz
- cd dfu-programmer-0.4.0
- ./configure
- make
- ln -s /home/tuxdroid/dfu-programmer-0.4.0/src/dfu-programmer /usr/local/bin
- apt-get install gcc-avr avr-libc gdb-avr libsvn-dev
- wget http://svnwcrev.tigris.org/files/documents/3444/29110/svnwcrev-0.1.tar.gz
- tar -xzf svnwcrev-0.1.tar.gz
- cd svnwcrev-0.1
- sed 's/apr-0/apr-1.0/' config_mk.template > config.mk
- make
- ln -s /home/tuxdroid/svnwcrev-0.1/svnwcrev /usr/local/bin/
Audio
- apt-get install alsa-utils mpg321
- cat /proc/asound/cards
0 [Droid ]: USB-Audio - Tux Droid Kysoh Tux Droid at usb-0000:00:01.0-1, full speed
For oss layer:
- modprobe snd_pcm_oss
- modprobe snd_mixer_oss
tests to do:
- madplay (fixed point mp3 player)
- www.musicpd.org
Status
- compiling tuxdaemon OK
- running tuxdaemon FAIL
- USB part seems ok (displays tux events properly) but not TCP part, seems not to be listening on port
- compiling tuxup OK
- compiling dfu-programmer OK
- compiling svncrev OK
- compiling tuxcore tuxaudio OK
- flashing tuxcore.hex tuxcore.eep tuxaudio.hex tuxaudio.eep OK
- sound PARTLY
- ALSA and OSS-emulation layers are up
- the sound is quite hashed and lot of "alsa underrun" msgs, slightly better results through oss than alsa
- recording at 8000 Hz mono is very poor (played on host)
- playing at 8000 Hz mono is poor (recorded on host)
- madplay -b8 -R8000 ...mp3 is correct
Misc
Boot diagnostics
From /usr/share/doc/nslu2-utils/README.Debian but in case of problems I prefer to have the text here :-)
Some of the led states during boot include: - Cycling down all the leds from top to bottom: The APEX boot loader. - Amber status led: Initramfs is running, mounting root filesystem. - Disk 1 on, status slowly switching between amber and green: Root filesystem mounted, system booting. - Disk 1 on, status green, with fast double amber flashes: System is booted and running. The frequency of the amber flashes indicates the system's one minute load average; faster flashes denote higher load. - Disk 1 on, status quickly flashing between black/green and black/amber. Single user mode. Again the flash interval denotes load. - Disk 1 on, status slowly switching beteween amber and red: Shutdown in progress.